Chalcogen–mercury bond formation and disruption in model Rabenstein's reactions: A computational analysis

Andrea Madabeni(University of Padua), Marco Dalla Tiezza(University of Padua), Folorunsho Bright Omage(Universidade Federal de Santa Maria), Pablo A. Nogara(University of Padua), Marco Bortoli(University of Padua), João Batista Teixeira da Rocha(Universidade Federal de Santa Maria), Laura Orian(University of Padua)
Journal of Computational Chemistry
July 13, 2020
Cited by 27Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Methylmercury is a highly toxic compound and human exposure is mainly related to consumption of polluted fish and seafood. The inactivation of thiol‐based enzymes, promoted by the strong affinity binding of electrophilic mercuric ions to thiol and selenol groups of proteins, is likely an important factor explaining its toxicity. A key role is played by the chemistry and reactivity of the mercury–chalcogens bond, particularly HgS and HgSe, which is the focus of this computational work (level of theory: (COSMO)‐ZORA‐BLYP‐D3(BJ)/TZ2P). We analyze nine ligand‐exchange model reactions (the so‐called Rabenstein's reactions) involving an entering ligand (methylchalcogenolate) and a substrate (methylchalcogenolatemethylmercury). Trends in reaction and activation energies are discussed and a change in mechanism is reported for all cases when going from gas phase to water, that is, from a single‐well potential energy surface (PES) to a canonical S N 2‐like mechanism. The reasons accounting for the biochemically challenging and desired displacement of methylmercury from a seleno/thiol protein can be found already in these model reactions, as can be seen from the similarities of the ligand exchange reactions in solution in thermodynamics and kinetics.


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